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David Leggat: Third match would have at least shown which team had the edge

By David Leggat
5:30 AM Saturday Dec 1, 2012
Mahela Jayawardene. Photo / Getty Images

Mahela Jayawardene. Photo / Getty Images

Cracking win, and it's always best to enjoy the good moments, because when it comes to the New Zealand cricket team these days you figure a low is likely to be just around the corner.

They won well, thoroughly deserved it, but where's the decider? No third test when the situation cried out for something to separate these teams.

It's like turning up at a restaurant, savouring the starter and main then being told, "sorry we're out of desserts". That has become New Zealand's lot far too often.

Five of New Zealand's past eight test opponents have involved two-match contests. The exceptions were last summer's welcome three-match rubber against South Africa and a couple of one-off tests against Zimbabwe. That's been New Zealand's situation since their three-test trip to India in late 2010.

When New Zealand went to Pakistan in 2002, they played just two tests, perhaps one occasion when two seemed a smarter option than three. The next six series were two-test events.

They leave an unfilled taste about them. It's fair to argue in some instances, such as a few series against Australia, when both have been heavy losses, a third isn't required to argue the merits of the two teams. But those were more the exception.

Since their test debut in 1930, New Zealand have contested five-test rubbers five times - in South Africa in 1953-54 and 1961-62, in India in 1955-56, in England in 1958 and in the West Indies in 1972.

Four-test series? There have been seven, most recently the tour of England in 1999, which New Zealand won 2-1.

Otherwise, New Zealand had by and large been a three-test assignment for other nations until this disturbing trend set in.

Sri Lanka's captain, Mahela Jayawardene, alluded to the situation after the test yesterday. He understood the problem but reckoned "you probably need another month on the calender".

The squeeze to fit all international assignments into 12 months, as dictated by the Future Tours Programme, means corners are cut.

Cricket has plenty of problems to wrestle with these days. The festering sore of match fixing, crowd sizes in most test-playing nations, the shambles around the Decision Review System - to have it or not, and who should pay for it - and the rise in power of four countries, India, Australia, England and South Africa are among them.

Compared with those, whether teams meet two or three times may seem like a trifling matter.

It's not, although granted it does not warrant top place on a Things to Do list for the International Cricket Council.

Next up New Zealand have two tests in South Africa at the start of next month, before England arrive for the high point of the home season, three tests, three ODIs and three T20s, plus three other non-international games. Then it's off to England and, later, Bangladesh, both two-test shows before the West Indies come for what is expected to be three tests next summer.

A third test allows players, and teams, to really prove their worth. A dud umpiring decision or two and your series can be cooked.

And as both players and spectators too often you can come away from a second test, pack the bags, head for the airport and still be none the wiser which team are really superior. On that score, this series in Sri Lanka is a case in point.

By David Leggat
Hamish Hudson () | 10:30AM Sunday, 02 Dec 2012
It has been an interesting season. The New Zealand cricket team has been vilified for a season that was extremely poor, and rightly so. But, perhaps it needs a second look. We were given a drubbing by Australia first up - nothing new there. We then won the next test on the back of our young seam attack.

I would not include victories against Bangladesh or Zimbabwe as an indicator of success. We lost against South Africa, but, and I believe this is important, we competed against a side which is currently the best in the world. The series which really hurt were the losses to WI and India, mainly due to the dumb cricket we played, and most of the fault lies at the feet or our batsmen.

This last win in Sri Lanka shows we have the making of a really interesting fast bowling attack, and, when the batsmen knuckle down, the possibility of winning regularly. Next step - win a series against a major cricketing nation. This has not happened for a long time.
Penehuro John pelenato () | 10:30AM Sunday, 02 Dec 2012
Whichever way you look at it, the skipper carries this team most of the time. The stats dont lie. Please give the man the support and accolades he deserves!
mr straw () | 12:37PM Monday, 03 Dec 2012
About time we see some articles in the media criticising the trend towards two-test series. New Zealand have an exciting crop of 'promising' (that word again) cricketers, and the ONLY way they will get better, particularly in foreign conditions, is by playing test matches. The current situation where we play 50% fewer tests per year than the top teams will not lead us anywhere good.

This situation has been allowed to fester for far too long by NZC. David Leggat is right - the only time we should be scheduling two-test series is when there is an enormous gulf between teams. That's not often at present as all the top teams, although better than us, are flawed in their own ways. Even the three tests vs now-World#1 South Africa in NZ earlier this year were competitive enough.

It's also often no so hard to see where the extra test could have been fit into some of the schedules - against both Sri Lanka and West Indies recently we player FIVE one-dayers. That's just not necessary. Cut out two of those and you have your extra test. Play an extra T20 if you need it for economic reasons.

And of course, two test series aren't a great spectacle either.
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